Everybody Else’s Business: Coup Fever in Venezuela
This could have been seen as audacious. Instead, it had the smell of a not so well concealed sponsorship, the backing of
a meaty foreign hand. Venezuelan opposition leader and President of the National Assembly Juan Guaidó decided to take a
quick step in the direction of the presidency. His own counterfeit theory is simple: he is not being a usurper, so much
as a panacea for the usurpation by the current president, Nicolás Maduro. “I swear to assume all the powers of the
presidency to secure and end to the usurpation.”
Such language is not that of a principled revolutionary figure so much as a hired hand intent on returning the country
to conservative tedium. The power doing that hiring has had friendly press outlets for Guaidó to express his opinions.
On January 15, the president of the National Assembly was permitted space in The Washington Post to claim that his country was witnessing something without precedent. (Be wary of the message claiming the
exceptional.) “We have a government that has dismantled the state and kidnapped all institutions and manipulate them at
will.”
But even Guaidó had to explain, despite deeming Maduro an unrecognised figure, that Venezuela was not your vanilla,
crackpot dictatorship wedded to the use of police powers. “The regime may have ties to drug trafficking and guerrilla
groups, but we also have a functioning, democratically elected parliament, the National Assembly.” Pity, then, that
Guaidó needs so much outside help to make his call.
Maduro, understandably, fumed at the challenge. “We’ve had enough interventionism, here we have dignity damn it.” But
dignity is a hard matter to retain in broader geopolitical dramas. Shame, compromise, and a general muddying of
credibility tend to follow in such foreign incursions.
The official Venezuelan president cannot be said to have been a friend of state institutions. He is holding power under
a form of sufferance. His interpretation of the democratic mandate can be said to be sketchy at best, a feature not
uncommon in the history of the Americas. Authoritarianism breeds revolt, which breeds authoritarianism, a default
revenge mechanism. But Maduro has good reasons to sneer at his opponent and the warm embrace by US officials of the
movement seeking to remove the Chávista. The memory of 2002 and the failure on the part of Washington to remove Hugo
Chávez remains strong and, in some ways poisonous; the failed coup resulted in attempts on the part of Chávez to
neutralise the power of his opponents, be they in the Supreme Court or the corporate media. Mass round-ups and
executions were resisted, but authoritarian counter measures were used. Maduro has merely been one of Chávez’s keener
students in that regard.
To this dysfunctional mess can be added the pervasive, consistent and persistent molestation of US foreign policy.
Gardens in Latin America have been trampled upon by US thuggery since the Republic was founded, and the tendency is
instinctive and genetic. That thuggery also shares a neurotic relationship with democracy, the product Washington finds
hard to export while scuttling the democratic projects of others. Hustlers and gamblers are not, by their dispositions,
democratic: they believe in the doomed nature of change, and, to that end, identify the steady horse they would wish to
back in any political race. If that horse is sympathetic to capital interests, despite kicking in the teeth of liberal
democracy, all the better.
While apoplectic hysteria governs the US security heavies from the Hill to the public talk circuit about Russian
electoral interference, dispensation will always be given to meddling in the affairs of others. Trump, for one, has
acknowledged Guaidó’s declaration as legitimising an interim presidency, one that will arm an opponent of Maduro and
ensure a transition of loyalty to the United States. “The people of Venezuela have courageously spoken out against
Maduro and his regime and demanded freedom and the rule of law.” (Richly inconsistent, is The Donald, on matters
regarding freedom and the law.)
The international reaction has been illustrative of the broader issues at stake, making it far more than a matter of
pure bullying from Washington. Other countries have decided to make Venezuela their business, some by suggesting that it
should not be the business of others. Mexico remains an observer of the status quo. China and Russia have taken the view
that non-interference should be the policy while Turkey insists that Maduro dig in. Cuba and Bolivia had defended the
incumbent, but Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Peru and Argentina have gone the whole hog in accepting Guaidó.
Liberal democratic states have shown themselves presumptuous enough to violate the UN Charter in directly stating their
willingness to back Maduro’s opponents. Even timelines have been advanced and demands issued that directly impair the
Venezuelan political process. “Unless elections are announced within eight days,” suggested France’s unpopular President Emmanuel Macron, “we will be ready to recognise @jguaido as ‘President in charge’ of
Venezuela in order to trigger a political process.” Given Macron’s own tarnished legitimacy as leader, harangued as a
charlatan intent on market and labour reform, this came across as rich posturing.
The same with Spanish Prime Minster Pedro Sanchez, yet another figure who has decided to make Venezuelan politics a matter of personal interest. “The government of Spain gives [President] Nicolas Maduro
eight days to call free, transparent and democratic elections. If that doesn’t happen, Spain will recognise Juan Guaidó
as interim president in charge of calling these elections.” And to think that Sanchez can hardly be said to have a
standing vote in those elections.
As in other countries, the fate of the incumbent government may be decided by the loyalty of the army. The position, as
stated by the country’s defence minister Vladimir Padrino, is that the armed forces do not, at this point, recognise the
usurping antics of the opposition leader “imposed by shadowy interests… outside the law”. Such stances, as history
shows, change.
From this whole mess, one conclusion may be drawn. Venezuela has ceased being a midget to be pushed over by the obese
villain and its allies, though it still risks succumbing to the dictating wishes of others. Maduro has severed relations
with Washington, issuing marching orders to US diplomats. But the schismatic spectacle of two governments seeking to
pull the strings has become an absurdly disruptive prospect. Any state that has suggested this as feasible should be
wary of what they wish for.
Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne.
Email: bkampmark@gmail.com